


NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte has put an unusually explicit economic figure on Europe’s military dependence on the United States, arguing that approximately $300 billion in weapons purchases by European allies sustain 195,000 American defence jobs.
The intervention ahead of NATO’s 7–8th July Ankara summit is designed for a US political audience increasingly inclined to judge alliances through transactions. Rutte’s case is that European rearmament does not drain American resources without return; it supports factories, supply chains and skilled employment across the United States.
The argument may help defend the alliance in Washington. It also reveals a harder strategic truth for Europe: large increases in European defence budgets are still translating into substantial demand for US equipment because European industry cannot yet supply every capability at the required speed or scale.
Burden-sharing debates traditionally compare national spending as a share of gross domestic product. That measure shows political effort but says little about where procurement money goes. Rutte’s jobs figure shifts attention from percentages to contracts.
American aircraft, air-defence systems, missiles, helicopters and precision weapons remain central to European acquisition plans. Those orders create a domestic constituency in the United States for continued transatlantic defence ties. In a transactional political environment, jobs in US congressional districts may carry more weight than abstract appeals to shared values.
Defence Matters reported in April that Rutte used an earlier Washington address to press allies on spending and production. The new argument advances that strategy by presenting European spending as a contribution to American industrial strength.
The same $300 billion figure can be read less comfortably in Europe. It indicates how much of the rearmament dividend is flowing to US suppliers rather than expanding European production.
Purchasing American equipment can be operationally rational. Production lines exist, systems are proven and many capabilities are already used across NATO. Common equipment can improve interoperability and reduce integration risk.
But dependence creates vulnerabilities. US delivery schedules are under pressure from global demand and American operational requirements. Export approvals can be delayed or politicised. Some systems rely on US-controlled software, maintenance, munitions and upgrades throughout their service life.
Europe therefore faces a dual requirement: buy what is available to close urgent gaps, while investing enough at home to avoid making long-term readiness contingent on a single external supplier.
The Ankara summit will be judged on whether allies can turn spending into forces that can fight. Contract values and employment figures do not by themselves produce ready brigades, protected airbases or stocked magazines.
European militaries need air defence, long-range fires, drones, electronic warfare, secure communications, transport, engineering, ammunition and trained personnel. They also need maintenance capacity and resilient infrastructure. Defence Matters has tracked how European investment is rising as Readiness 2030 takes shape, but higher totals can coexist with fragmented procurement and long delivery queues.
Rutte’s industrial argument should therefore not become a substitute for capability analysis. A purchase that supports US jobs may still arrive too late, lack sufficient ammunition or create a sustainment burden that limits operational use.
For President Trump, the figures fit a familiar proposition: allies should spend more, and American industry should benefit. Rutte is effectively arguing that NATO already advances both goals.
For European governments, the message is more complicated. US purchases can reinforce political ties and fill immediate gaps, but they can also weaken claims of strategic autonomy if domestic production fails to grow alongside them.
The best outcome is not autarky. NATO’s strength comes from integrated industrial and military capacity across the Atlantic. The problem arises when integration becomes one-way dependence, particularly for consumable items such as missiles and ammunition that would be used rapidly in a high-intensity conflict.
European allies need joint orders, longer contracts and common standards capable of supporting both European and North American production. They must also reduce the national fragmentation that leaves small, incompatible fleets spread across the continent.
Rutte’s 195,000-job claim is politically astute because it translates alliance policy into something tangible for American voters. It may help sustain US commitment at a difficult moment. Yet it should also sharpen Europe’s own debate.
If rearmament continues to create more industrial depth in the United States than in Europe, the continent may spend considerably more without gaining the freedom of action or supply resilience it needs. Ankara must address both sides of the bargain: American commitment to Europe and European capacity to carry a larger share of the defence burden in practice.
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